Sociology of the Family - Chapter 2
Extended families
Colonial America, before 1820 family households in which relatives beyond parents and their children live together
Modern relationship
-increase in women's paid work changed marriage -more pressure on compatibility between men and women -decline of traditional nuclear family and rise of family diversity -increased sense of freedom and individual security and isolation
Homogamy
marriage between two people of the same sex
Patrilocal
A living arrangement in which a young married couple lives in or near the husband's family home
Matrilocal
A living arrangement in which a young married couple lives in or near the wife's family home
Urban Transformations
-Young, single adults are increasingly drawn to cities -Older people are finding it easier to live in small apartments in urban areas
Institutional Arenas
Family and Market: Men and Women, Separate and Together -Separate Spheres Family and State: "Monogamous Morality" No Families: Widows and Orphans African Americans, Asian Americans, and Mexican Americans: Families Apart
1960s-Present
New Family Diversity two institutional factors: market forces and state forces Marriage: Out with the Old -Modern relationships, Modern identities -Independence Children and Families: Emotional Bonds What's in a Name
Before 1820
Colonial America American Indians: The Family as a Social Structure Colonial Americans: "So Chosen, He is Her Lord" -Coveture Children and Families: More Work and Less Play -Extended families -Stem family African Americans: Families Enslaved
Coverture
Colonial America, before 1820 a legal doctrine that lasted until the late nineteenth century, under which wives were incorporated into their husbands' citizenship
Stem Family
Colonial America, before 1820 the household formed by one grown child remaining in the family home with his or her parents
1820-1900
Emerging Modern Family Marriage: New Ideals, New Traditions -Courtship Children and Families: Fewer and More Tender -Institutional Arenas
Courtship
Emerging Modern Family 1820-1900 the mate selection process in which couples begin a relationship with supervised contact in public, then proceed to additional dates in the woman's home and then to marriage if the parents approve
Monogamy
a family system in which each person has only one spouse
Polygamy
a family system in which one person has more than one spouse, usually one man and multiple women
Nuclear Family
a married, monogamous couple living with their own (usually biological) children and no extended family members
Conjugal family
a nuclear family that is also functionally independent of extended family members
Heterogamy
marriage between a man and a woman
Separate Spheres
the cultural doctrine under which women were to work at home, to make it a sanctuary from the industrial world in which their husbands worked for pay
1900-1960s
Modern Family Companionship Family Marriage: Unequal Companions -Companionate Marriage -Dating -Family Wage Children and Families: From Bust to Boom -Baby boom
Companionate marriage
Modern Family 1900-1960s a view of marriage as a companionship, a friendship, and a romance, rather than as a practical platform for cooperation and survival
Companionship Family
Modern Family, 1900-1960s an ideal type of family characterized by the mutual affection, equality, and comradeship of its members
Family wage
Modern Family, 1900-1960s the amount necessary for a male earner to provide subsistence for his wife and children without them having to work for pay
Dating
Modern Family, 1900-1960s the mate selection process in which young adults spend time with a variety of partners before making a long-term commitment
Baby boom
Modern Family, 1900-1960s the period of high birth rates in the US between 1946 and 1964
Patriarchy
family system in which power is wielded by men in the family -the system of men's control over property and fathers' authority over all family members
Matriarchy
family system in which power is wielded by women in the family
Patrilineal
family system in which wealth and power are transmitted from fathers to their sons
Matrilineal
family system in which wealth and power are transmitted from mothers to daughters